William C. Winters built and operated the Wimberley Mill and Cotton Gin in the 1850s.
At first the mill consisted only of a sawmill powered by the Cypress Creek, but
Winters later added a gristmill. After Winters died in 1864, his son-in-law John
Cude took over operation of the mill and added a buhrstone flour mill and a shingle
mill. Additionally, the settlement around the mill became known as Cude’s Mill. In
the 1870s, when Cude sold the mill to Pleasant Wimberley (1823-1919), the town’s
name changed to Wimberley’s Mill, which by 1880 became simply Wimberley. In 1898,
Pleasant razed the original mill and rebuilt it to include a steam engine powered
cotton gin. Pleasant had several partners while he owned the mill, including his
sons Andrew and Zachary, his son-in-law Nathan Emory Hughes, and his grandson-in-law
John Will Pyland, who also ran a dry goods store. With the addition of partners the
company’s name changed from Wimberley and Sons to Wimberley and Pyland.

Dr. W. J. Pyland (1845-1906) moved to East Texas from Tennessee in 1880 and worked as
an apothecary in Lassater, Texas. He moved to Wimberley in 1882, seeking a better
climate for his sick wife, Annie Eliza Bobbitt. In Wimberley, Pyland ran an
apothecary and medical practice until his death in 1906. His son, John Will
(1870-1937) married Pleasant Wimberley’s granddaughter, Susie Wimberley, and
operated the Wimberley Mill after Pleasant Wimberley’s death in 1919 until the
business folded in 1925, due to a decline in small farmers in the area. The Mill was
torn down in 1934.

Ledgers from three separate Wimberley, Texas, businesses comprise the Wimberley Mill
and Gin Ledgers, 1897-1920. Ledgers from Wimberley and Pyland Mill and Gin comprise
the bulk of the collection. Ranging from 1898 to 1912, the ledgers span a time
period that included Pleasant and Zachary Wimberley’s deaths. Furthermore, one
ledger contains a handwritten petition to Governor James E. Ferguson concerning
reform in cotton ginning laws. The petition includes signatures of men from several
prominent Wimberley families, such as the Adares, the Dobies, and the Hills.
Additionally, the collection contains two sales ledgers from Dr. W. J. Pyland’s
apothecary and medical practice, spanning from 1897 to 1902. W. J. Pyland annotated
the endpapers and flyleaves with chemical recipes, notes, and equations. The
collection also consists of three ledgers from a dry goods store run by W. J. Pyland
and his son John Will Pyland. The ledgers include several loose, handwritten notes,
checks, and receipts.

Basic processing and cataloging of this collection was supported with funds from the
National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) for the Briscoe
Center’s “History Revealed: Bringing Collections to Light project,” 2009-2011.